Prince Harry is a new man on the anniversary of his nude photo scandal, plus more news

It's been exactly four years since photographic evidence of Prince Harry's infamous game of strip billiards in Las Vegas surfaced and as E! News points out, Harry's party-past is starting to fade out of view. And it may have taken one of the royal family's most notorious scandals for Harry to start becoming serious about finding his purpose in life. "The person who took the dimmest view of all was the Queen, an insider tells the website. "She made it abundantly clear that nothing like that would ever happen again. When you get a direct chastising from granny you know it's serious. It was undoubtedly a turning point." In 2013, Harry acknowledged his mistake in the Telegraph. "At the end of the day I probably let myself down, I let my family down, I let other people down….It was probably a classic example of me probably being too much Army and not enough prince. It's a simple case of that," he said. And while there are still parties in Harry's life, a friend says the royal has been more cautious about keeping his celebrations private. At 31, his inner circle is starting to settle down, too. "He is not the boy we saw in the Vegas debacle," a Royal source tells E! "He is so much more grown up now. The Invictus Games changed everything for him, but also his own charity Sentebale and lately the mental health charity, Heads Together. He is devoted to making a difference."

It's been exactly four years since photographic evidence of Prince Harry's infamous game of strip billiards in Las Vegas surfaced and as E! News points out, Harry's party-past is starting to fade out of view. And it may have taken one of the royal family's most notorious scandals for Harry to start becoming serious about finding his purpose in life. "The person who took the dimmest view of all was the Queen, an insider tells the website. "She made it abundantly clear that nothing like that would ever happen again. When you get a direct chastising from granny you know it's serious. It was undoubtedly a turning point." In 2013, Harry acknowledged his mistake in the Telegraph. "At the end of the day I probably let myself down, I let my family down, I let other people down….It was probably a classic example of me probably being too much Army and not enough prince. It's a simple case of that," he said. And while there are still parties in Harry's life, a friend says the royal has been more cautious about keeping his celebrations private. At 31, his inner circle is starting to settle down, too. "He is not the boy we saw in the Vegas debacle," a Royal source tells E! "He is so much more grown up now. The Invictus Games changed everything for him, but also his own charity Sentebale and lately the mental health charity, Heads Together. He is devoted to making a difference."